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An unlikely silk: the composite material of green lacewing cocoons
Authors:Weisman Sarah  Trueman Holly E  Mudie Stephen T  Church Jeffrey S  Sutherland Tara D  Haritos Victoria S
Affiliation:CSIRO Entomology, Clunies Ross Street, Acton, ACT 2601, Australia.
Abstract:Spiders routinely produce multiple types of silk; however, common wisdom has held that insect species produce one type of silk each. This work reports that the green lacewing ( Mallada signata, Neuroptera) produces two distinct classes of silk. We identified and sequenced the gene that encodes the major protein component of the larval lacewing cocoon silk and demonstrated that it is unrelated to the adult lacewing egg-stalk silk. The cocoon silk protein is 49 kDa in size and is alanine rich (>40%), and it contains an alpha-helical secondary structure. The final instar lacewing larvae spin protein fibers of approximately 2 microm diameter to construct a loosely woven cocoon. In a second stage of cocoon construction, the insects lay down an inner wall of lipids that uses the fibers as a scaffold. We propose that the silk protein fibers provide the mechanical strength of the composite lacewing cocoon whereas the lipid layer provides a barrier to water loss during pupation.
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